The Heights of Fashion: Platform Shoes Then and Now


The Heights of Fashion:

Platform Shoes Then and Now

April 25, 2009 - July 3, 2011

Mint Museum of Art 

 

 

 

Man's Platform Shoes by El Pederoso, circa 1974-79

burgundy and cream patent leatheron 1-3/4" platform soles with 4" heels.

Private Collection.Photo courtesy of LovePVintage.

 

Throughout time, elevated shoes have appeared in cultures around the world. In Ancient Greece, actors wore thick-soled shoes to heighten their stature, while in Europe from about 1600-1750, tall pedestal shoes called chopines were worn by some women in high society and the demimonde. In Northeast China, thick platform shoes were fashionable in the Manchu culture and in Japan, tall platform sandals became part of the traditional dress of geishas.

 

Fashionable platform shoes first appeared in Europe and the United States in the 1930s and 1940s, but reached their greatest popularity during the 1970s. Platforms continue today as fashion statements worn by both sexes. Top couture designers create unique platform shoes that move, sometimes cautiously by the wearer, from the runway to the street. The Heights of Fashion: Platform Shoes Then and Now showcases an array of approximately 60 platform shoes from the 1930s through the present.

 

Check out the Heels.tv video of the exhibition! 

 

Watch Charles Mo, Director of Fine Arts for The Mint Museum talk about it!

 

History of Footwear and the Platform Shoe:

 

Historical Examples of the Platform Shoe:

 

 Print Resources available at The Mint Museum Library:

 

To find more books on shoes and fashion, search MARCO, the Mint Art Research Catalog Online 

 

 

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Created by Rebecca Stockin, Volunteer at the Mint Museum Library